What if Mary Had Known About Abortion? By Rev. Mark H. Creech , Christian Post Columnist

Recently I saw a t-shirt that said, “The Virgin Mary was an Unwed  Teenage Mother.” That’s true and it reminded me of an interruption that took  place at a Quebec pro-life conference back in October of this year.  LifeSiteNews.com says about a dozen pro-choice protestors descended upon an  evangelical church where the conference was being held, chanting blasphemous  slogans, one of which was a French pro-abortion sing-song against the Virgin  Mary: Ah si Marie avait connu l’avortment, on n’aurait pas tous ces  emmerdement.s. Translated this means, “Oh, If Mary had known about abortion, we wouldn’t have to deal with all this  nonsense.” [1]

Mary was surely a remarkable young woman. When the angel Gabriel came to her  and announced she would bear the Messiah as a virgin, Mary embraced the will of  God knowing the sacrifices it would likely bring (Luke 1:26-38). The plans for  her marriage would be scuttled. For when the news of her pregnancy reached her  espoused husband, Joseph, he would seek to put her away privately. It was only  after Joseph was confronted by an angel himself that he decided to follow  through on the marriage  (Matthew 1:18-20). Her pregnancy would also cast a shadow of scandal over her  and her family. This was seen in a skirmish Jesus had with the religious leaders  of his day, when he referred to them as children of the devil. They in turn  viciously shot-back at Him with the intimation that He was a bastard child, born  of fornication (John 8:41).

By today’s standards in a culture of death, this teenage mother would have  been urged to abort her child. But what if it had been possible for Mary to  abort Jesus?

In his book, What if Jesus Had Never Been Born, the late Dr. D.  James Kennedy writes at length about the immeasurable impact Christianity has  made on the world. Kennedy rightly argues that hospitals, universities, literacy  and education for the masses,  capitalism and free enterprise, representative government, the separation of  political powers, civil liberties, the abolition of slavery, modern science, the discovery of the new world by Columbus,  the elevation of women, benevolence and charity, higher standards of justice,  the elevation of the common man, the condemnation of adultery, homosexuality and other sexual perversions,  which has helped spare the human race, as well as save many from great  heartache, a high regard for human life, the civilizing of barbaric and  primitive cultures, the codifying and putting to print many of the world’s  languages, the inspiration for some of the world’s greatest pieces of art and music, the countless changed lives  from liabilities to assets in society – all have their roots in the  Judeo-Christian ethic. [1]

Indeed, if Jesus had never been born it would have created a huge black hole  bankrupting the world of the sweetest of treasures.

Of course, the birth of Jesus was unique in that God was taking upon Himself  the form of a man. That is much of the beauty of the incarnation of Christ. In  that act God dignified and imbued every human life with an inherent value. When  God robed himself with human flesh, he was communicating to every age this  dramatic declaration, “Everybody is somebody special.”

During this season of the year, millions of people across the country will  enjoy watching the 1946 Frank Capra film classic, “It’s a Wonderful Life.” Jimmy  Stewart stars as George Bailey, whose life takes an unfortunate turn and he  wishes that he was never born. As George stands on a bridge contemplating  suicide, an angel sent from God comes to show him through a series of  experiences how the world would have been impoverished without him. Then the  angel says, “Strange, isn’t it? Every man’s life touches so many other lives,  and when he isn’t around he leaves an awful hole to fill, doesn’t he?…You see  what a mistake it would be to throw it away.”

Unfortunately, we often don’t see the real costs abortion precipitates. I’m  not one accustomed to quoting Joseph Stalin, but in this case I think it’s  appropriate. Stalin is reported to have said, “A single death is a tragedy, a  million deaths is a statistic.” Abortion in America is not just statistics, its  55 million tragedies – 55 million “awful holes” in society.

Today thousands of women are considering an abortion. Like Mary, the mother  of Jesus, they find themselves in the difficult circumstances of having a child  in unfavorable conditions. Surely it crossed Mary’s mind that when Joseph found  out that she was with child, he wouldn’t marry her. Then how would she and her  child receive proper support? Surely she thought of the possible humiliation and  shame she and her family might undergo. Yet, the Bible teaches this unwed  teenage mother accepted God’s will and trusted Him implicitly. This is what  every woman facing an unexpected and problematic pregnancy ought to do.

Make no mistake. I am not in any way suggesting Mary had been sexually  impure. But the situation she faced and its similarities to that of many women  who encounter the question of abortion each day is striking, nonetheless.

Si Marie avait connu l’avortment – if Mary had known about abortion – if it  had been available to her in her own time – if she had chosen an abortion – life  would be like Jack London‘s character, Wolf Larsen said in “Sea Wolf”: “Life?  Bah! It has no value. Of the cheap things it is the cheapest.” [3] It was  because of Jesus’ birth, the birth of the Son of God – Almighty God Himself  identifying with humanity by becoming flesh that every life is sanctified – every life is deemed special.

Abortion is throwaway life filling our world with dreadful and profound  holes.

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